Limited-timeFree scans and removals, no strings attached.Start free
FrontlinePrivacy
Back to law enforcement

Corrections officers

COs face threats with longer memories than most. Address exposure matters here.

Why this page exists

COs deal with people who have nothing but time to remember, plan, and reach out after release. The address-exposure problem here has a particular timeline — threats can land months or years after the encounter that produced them.

What we sweep for you

The threat profile here is delayed and persistent — release dates produce calls and visits months later — so we sweep on the same delayed cadence the threat operates on. Removals across broker sites, biweekly re-checks, with extra attention to the prior-address chain because an inmate released in 2026 will find your 2019 address just as easily as your current one. Brokers store both.

We sweep the family the same way. The pattern this work produces: when an inmate can't reach you, they reach for your wife or kid. We close that route.

What you should do today, free

Most state corrections agencies have an internal address-confidentiality program for sworn personnel — file it with the records unit, today. It's free, it's underused, and it handles the public side. The free scan maps what the brokers still have. We close that gap continuously.

Laws that protect you